Progress Report on the Stockade

We are looking for strong volunteers to help finish this
stockade project!

It has been a long struggle, but some of the bastion wall is finally up. Our thanks go out to Danny Oates of Hampshire Homebuilders who supplied a backhoe and operator on Friday, Sept. 8th just so we could have something up for French and Indian War Heritage Day, part of our County's Hampshire Heritage Days celebration. The wall is made up of full and half-split locust posts. The taller flag pole is the point of the bastion; on the right is the last bastion pole before it turns to the regular wall. The bastion protrudes out from the wall so a man can stand protected inside it and fire along the wall at anyone trying to burn, batter or climb over the wall.

The first picture above shows the "inside" of the bastion; the picture immediately to the right shows the outside view. We followed the example of Col. Washington at Fort Necessity who used split white oak with the flat side facing out toward the enemy. We believe this was so there would be fewer angles for bullets to ricochet off. If you look closely you can see that some of the split logs have a pronounced twist to them; this is natural in split logs.

We will have to take time later to get up on a scafold and cut the points in the top of the logs. Our hurried schedule did not allow for all finish work to be done before we had to raise the wall. Thanks to the Foundation's President, Mark Jones, and to our friend, Phil Gallery, who helped with the wall erection. We also owe a "Thank you" to North River Mills's resident locust post splitter, Buck O'Brien, for his artful work. Why he slit the easy logs and left the hard, twisted ones to us we can not imagine!

Neither our budget nor our supply of laborers allow us to reproduce all of the wall the archaeologists have discovered as a full size stockade. Therefore we have used a little imagination and ask our visitors to do the same. The bastion will be reproduced full size, but most of the rest of the wall will be marked by short logs. This allows each locust post to cover many more lineal feet of stockade than if we used full 14 foot logs upright. One will be able to stand within a full size bastion (when it is complete) and see the outline of the entire stockade as it has been excavated. It will just take a little imagination to see it as a full size, Indian-proof, bullet-proof fort wall.

If you have any 14 foot long straight locust logs between 6-12 in diameter and would like to donate them, please let us know. We would be happy for any help we can get in completing this project.

Our hope is to have a wall that represents what
the archeologists have found. The drawing above has added some segments
(including the gate section) that have not yet been discovered, but the in-wall bastion, the end bastion and jog
in the wall have been found. At the present time
only the in-wall bastion is planned to be full size; the other
segments will be represented by short logs. Can you help with this
project?

Earlier Work

On June 17, 2006 we had scheduled another work day for the stockade. However, it turned out to be a weekend when few people were available, so we had only three volunteers who came to help. In spite of the small numbers we made substantial progress.

Start of the Day

Fortunately, our Work Day had been preceeded by
much preparatory labor. One of the major tasks was outlining the
stockade wall using the plans supplied by Stephen McBride, our
Archaeologist. Frank Whitacre,
a local surveyor, donated his time on Friday to come work on marking
our stockade line. The white line you see here sprayed in the grass
is our approximation of the actual stockade feature. We
say "approximation" because we have laid out straight lines assuming that we, like
the fort builders of old, will deviate slightly and get the kind of
line the actual stockade had - a not quite perfect line. Of course, we
have not discovered the entire stockade line, so we have gaps that
will be shown as our estimations. The flag pole marking the
bastion point is just to the right of the photo.

The other preparatory work was securing the
locust logs. We have been fortunate to find a logger in
Pennsylvania who has some very fine locust logs. They are almost
impossible to find in West Virginia east of the Allegheny Front. One
of our Directors hauled the logs from Pennsylvania on a trialer.
Here they await unloading. You can see they are a very good size and quite
straight. Some are large enough to split. In colonial times when
large logs were so plentiful, it was common to split logs for a
stockade. You get more footage from the log that way.

The next task after unloading the trailer
and hauling more logs from a nearby location was to cut some logs to
length and sharpen the tops. Here you see two of our newest
volunteers, Daniel and Nathaniel Grodzicki working on that task. You
will note that Daniel has brought his freshly sharpened axe for the job.
The axe would have been the common tool on the frontier rather than a
saw. However, in colonial times they used what is known as a broad
axe with a broader blade than we use today.

Sharpening the
log tops with fingers and toes well out of harm's way

Meanwhile, our other volunteer,
Jason Johnsrud, was doing the laborious
task of debarking the logs. It is not necessary for us to take all
the bark off, since it will weather off, but where the logs abutt one
another, it is best to debark the logs for a tighter fit. Since the
loggers cut these locusts when they find them on a job, they are not
always cut when it is easiest to debark them. For some, the bark
will almost fall off, but for most it is a very laborious task. Note
Jason's specialized tool - yes, it is the trusty folding military shovel for
digging foxholes.

Finally, late in the afternoon, we got around to putting up the posts. Our project calls for an actual
stockade wall only in the area of the bastion since logs are so limited
and our work crew so sparse. Therefore, we are putting up posts at
the turns in the wall and at the ends of features. Below you see our
volunteers standing by the post marking the southernmost bastion's point.
As time and labor allows we will continue to complete our project.
However, we can only do it if we get help from our members and friends.

We
thank Jason who came from northern Virginia and Nathaniel and Daniel who
came from Harpers Ferry to help us for the day. They did a wonderful
job in spite of the 90 degree heat!

This
shot is looking from the south half bastion of the stockade wall northward
to the bastion.
Most of the wall will be represented by the short logs
just barely showing the outline above the grass.

Getting volunteers to work on the stockade project has been something of a problem, but finally three Board members got together to restart the stockade project. In spite of the cold and damp November day, the three intrepid workers loaded a pile of locust logs an a trailer and brought them to the site. Here you see Mark Jones and Clyde DeWitt unloading and dragging logs to the work pile where they will await a better day so the logs can be prepared for erection. It certainly helped to have Clyde's small tractor particularly since, unlike Joseph Edwards and Col. Washington, we don't have a team of horses.

Please remember that we are looking for volunteers to help finish our stockade interpretation so our site will have more interesting things for our visitors to see. Col. Washington needs you to help!

Photos below are as of February, 2015. We still need all the help we can get in upgrading, maintenance and other work for the visitor center.

Looking from the end bastion to the in-wall bastion. The short logs represent the tall stockade wall.

This photo shows the breadth of the western stockade wall as curently found by excavation.